Publications by authors named "N Gonzalez de Vega"

Asphalt, widely used in infrastructure, emits complex chemical mixtures throughout its service life, posing significant risks to human health and the environment. This expanded understanding extends the concern from a construction-related hazard to a broader public health issue, especially affecting vulnerable populations like children who play on blacktop surfaces. Despite increased awareness, the specific mechanisms behind asphalt emissions, their impact on asphalt deterioration, and their effects on the human nervous system remain poorly understood.

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  • Torpor includes various adaptations to environmental stress like hibernation and daily torpor.
  • StrokeofGenus is a new analytic tool that helps identify gene expression patterns related to different forms of torpor by analyzing RNA-seq data from several species.
  • The study reveals three distinct transcriptional states during torpor and shows that certain gene expressions are conserved across various species, suggesting a common evolutionary background for these physiological processes.
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Unlabelled: Specialized host-microbe symbioses are ecological communities, whose composition is shaped by various processes. Microbial community assembly in these symbioses is determined in part by interactions between taxa that colonize ecological niches available within habitat patches. The outcomes of these interactions, and by extension the trajectory of community assembly, can display priority effects-dependency on the order in which taxa first occupy these niches.

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Critical to our understanding of infections and their treatment is the role the innate immune system plays in controlling bacterial pathogens. Nevertheless, many in vivo systems are made or modified such that they do not have an innate immune response. Use of these systems denies the opportunity to examine the synergy between the immune system and antimicrobial agents.

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  • Scientists don't know much about vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC), a cancer mostly found in older women, especially about its mutations and how different types affect survival.
  • In a study of 60 patients, they found three main types of VSCC related to the human papillomavirus (HPV) and some common gene mutations, particularly in the TP53 gene.
  • Patients with mutations in TP53 and CCND1 had a much higher chance of their cancer coming back, suggesting that these changes could help doctors find better treatments for VSCC.
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